The Legal World Meets The Scientific Method at Inspire.Legal

The Legal Innovation Community Meets The Scientific Method

After a week at the Legal Tech show in Midtown Manhattan, which it’s fair to say was in a more traditional conference mould, what would Inspire.Legal, the new, super cool, un-conference at New York Law School in TriBeCa, with its range of un-panels be like…?

Artificial Lawyer was invited along to the sell-out event and this is what went down, at least up until the end of lunch when I had to run to JFK.

—

The first question you want answered is: what is an unconference? Was it really a break with the past? The short answer is: not exactly.

It was basically people chatting about issues that relate to the adoption of legal tech, with some structure applied. I.e. it was a large-scale workshop.

And that was fine, chatting through issues can be fun, although ironically there were several aspects that were like any other conference, e.g. there was a panel, there were quite a few cases of people with mics talking to the audience, and with a lot of great legal tech founders sitting around the law school tables, there was plenty of opportunity to hear from them too and how their solutions were part of the answer to the questions we were posed by the organisers.

What Was The Purpose?

Groups were assigned questions to explore and in AL’s case this was initially: What is the role of lawyers in evaluating legal technology? Followed by an effort to explore the issues related to legal data.

The questions were not new, but the approach, although not explicitly set out by the organisers, such as Christian Lang, now CSO of Reynen Court, seemed to be all about the introduction of a scientific methodology to legal innovation – which on the day was sold as ‘design’, ‘meeting challenges’ etc and other in vogue language.

However, words such as ‘test’, ‘evidence’, ‘experiment’, and ‘hypothesis’ came up again and again from the hosts, including Matt Homann of design agency, Filament. In fact, one of the best quotes of the day came from Homann, who displayed the words of Abraham Lincoln on the main screen:

‘Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe.’

I.e. don’t just go at a hard task without preparation of the method you are going to use to solve it. Or…to put it another way, design your hypothesis and experiment before putting it all to the test.

The Scientific Method

For those of us who stared out of the window during physics lessons at school, here’s what is classically meant by ‘the empirical scientific method’ –

Proposed experiment – ‘We will make associates work 48 hours without a break, collect their work output and maintain a ‘control’ group of associates working 8 hour days to do the same work.’

Test – ‘We conduct the above experiment and collect the results.’

Results – ‘There was a higher level of mistakes among the tired group.’

Conclusion – ‘Tired associates make errors.’

Of course, the beauty of science is that it doesn’t tell you what to do with this conclusion. That’s up to society. Maybe we don’t mind that conclusion? Maybe we do?

If we do, then we need to create a new hypothesis to solve what has now been designated as a ‘problem’ – or if you prefer the new happy-clappy version ‘a challenge’.

That’s the thing about science. It’s not always ‘solving a problem’. Sometimes science is used to, for example, find a new drug to cure a disease, but sometimes it’s wondering if a super black hole is really at the centre of a certain galaxy. Sometimes science is there just for knowledge’s sake…..which perhaps one day will contribute to solving a real world problem.

Insights

If Inspire.Legal was different from other events, it was because of one thing: the high level of audience participation and sharing of views – though one would expect that in a workshop. Below are some of the best lines AL heard.

One of the best single statements of the day came from US legal engineer, Nicole Bradick, who said: ‘I hate the words empathy and design thinking!’

Now, you might say, but aren’t those nice things…? Rather like a basket of Golden Labrador puppies?

True, but they are also rather meaningless truisms. Who is creating legal tech with the objective of mercilessly crushing humanity? (P.S. if you do know anyone trying to do this, please tell me, that would be quite an interview.)

The fact that people can get away with saying things like ’empathy is important’ – when it’s bloody obvious – and without having rotten tomatoes thrown at them and then dragged off stage, is perhaps a sign of where we still are as a sector.

Take the example of SAP and its awful invoicing software. Did SAP’s techies want to inflict harm on the world? Nope. Did they not even bother to test it? Nope – they certainly did test it. So how come it’s so awful to use?

The answer, AL would guess, is that they simply didn’t test the usability enough when it came to the end users. Was this due to a lack of empathy..? Not really. It was a lack of thorough testing. I.e. it was a failure of the scientific method. They’d not fully formulated the problem they were trying to solve.

OK, here are a collection of other sound bites, from some named speakers and others from the audience in general, that seemed to be worth recording for posterity. Enjoy:

Legal tech is like a rocket ship without a guidance system….we hope to guide it. (Joe Borstein – Thomson Reuters)

What we do in Clifford Chance is (Jeroen Plink)

Create – experiment

Best delivery – transform delivery

Applied solutions – repackage our institutional KM and sell it to the clients.

I have idea surplus disorder. (Matt Homann, The Filament.)

Who are the enemies and frenemies of the solution you have proposed?

Study how work is being done…..not just how they (the lawyers) say it is…

Lawyers are not technophobes…….(which generated a huge applause….although this was perhaps wishful clapping….also, the issue is not that lawyers are against tech, the issue is the unconscious bias against changing business methods…in which tech plays a key part.)

There is a disconnect between what associates want and what the partners want. Associates want good work, the partners want the associates to log hours.

We need to do anthropology – to study the lawyers’ behaviour.

Young lawyers may not want to say they have problems with the process….as they do not want to be seen as complaining about the firm. (Thought this one was a great comment – after all, how can you change the means of production when the pyramid system generates a bias toward deference and the status quo…?)

Bas Boris Visser (CC) – collaborative discussions are needed to take things forward. Now we are prepared to fail and that will drive a more strategic way of thinking.

Super star audience member – Look, Legal Week (the event) has been going for 20 years in NY and only now everyone (i.e. lawyers) is so interested in legal tech. It’s because ALSPs are starting to take money from law firms,………They are moving up the value chain.

ROI? – how do we measure this……..as we do not really measure (how lawyers produce work) now….how can you say there are any improvements?

Fundamentally this is all about following the flow of the information through the law firm – each gateway has to be a decision made or the start of a new process.

OK, that’s it.

Oh….and one last insight….everyone I met in the US says ‘legal tech’…not ‘law tech’ – which seems to be a British eccentricity.

—

Conclusion:

Was Inspire.Legal a wholly new type of event? No. But, it was a very good workshop and certainly law firms and inhouse legal teams should be holding this kind of event internally, and at a smaller scale, on a regular basis. So, congrats to Lang and team on a successful project.

Did this change anything in terms of how AL saw innovation? Not radically. But, it did help to concentrate thinking around scientific principles and that has been a very positive outcome. One might say it didn’t change things, so much as bring the challenges we all face into sharper focus. And that’s got to be a good thing.